Classifiers, partitions, and measurements: Exploring the syntax and semantics of sortal classifiers

In many languages, measure terms like item and kilo, as in two items of furniture and two kilos of rice, can be used either to partition the nominal denotation into countable units, or to measure a denotation without inducing a partition. These two types of measurements are associated with two different syntactic structures: a partition-structure where the measure term forms a constituent with the noun independent of the numeral, and a measure-structure where the measure term forms a constituent with the numeral. Some researchers have claimed that in classifier languages, sortal classifiers are (most often) used in a partition-structure— hence the classifier forms a constituent with the noun independent of the numeral. In contrast, non-sortal classifiers (i.e., measure classifiers) are often used in a measure-structure— the classifier forms a constituent with the numeral and this constituent modifies the noun. Contrary to these claims, we demonstrate that in Ch’ol (Mayan) all classifiers, sortal and nonsortal alike, are used in a measure-structure independent of the types of readings that are available with respect to the measure term. As a result, the correlation between partitioned meanings and partition-structures is not universal. We review several diagnostics that support this claim. These diagnostics can be used as a template to test the constituency structure in other classifier languages.

[1]  ScienceOpen Admin Glossa: a journal of general linguistics , 2018 .

[2]  J. Haviland,et al.  “Te xa setel xulem”[The buzzards were circling]: categories of verbal roots in (Zinacantec) Tzotzil , 1994 .

[3]  Judith Aissen,et al.  The Mayan Languages , 2017 .

[4]  Joseph H. Greenberg,et al.  Numeral Classifiers and Substantival Number: Problems in the Genesis of a Linguistic Type. Working Papers on Language Universals, No. 9. , 1972 .

[5]  Robert Henderson,et al.  Mayan Semantics , 2016, Lang. Linguistics Compass.

[6]  Susan Rothstein,et al.  Individuating and Measure Readings of Classifier Constructions: Evidence from Modern Hebrew , 2009 .

[7]  É. Mathieu,et al.  Measure words, plurality, and cross-linguistic variation , 2015 .

[8]  N. C. England Changes in Basic Word Order in Mayan Languages , 1991, International Journal of American Linguistics.

[9]  J. Coon,et al.  Deriving verb-initial word order in Mayan , 2018 .

[10]  Gennaro Chierchia,et al.  Mass nouns, vagueness and semantic variation , 2010, Synthese.

[11]  Viola Warkentin,et al.  Gramática ch'ol , 1980 .

[12]  R. Dixon,et al.  Adjective classes : a cross-linguistic typology , 2004 .

[13]  Judith Aissen Topic and focus in Mayan , 1992 .

[14]  Susan Rothstein,et al.  Counting, Measuring And The Semantics Of Classifiers , 2010 .

[15]  Barbara Partee,et al.  Sortal, Relational, and Functional Interpretations of Nouns and Russian Container Constructions , 2012, J. Semant..

[16]  J. Coon Building verbs in Chuj: Consequences for the nature of roots , 2018, Journal of Linguistics.

[17]  Jessica Coon,et al.  VOS as predicate fronting in Chol , 2010 .

[18]  Judith Aissen,et al.  Pied-piping, abstract agreement, and functional projections in Tzotzil , 1996 .

[19]  Maya Arad Locality Constraints on the Interpretation of Roots: The Case of Hebrew Denominal VERBS , 2003 .

[20]  R. Henderson The roots of measurement , 2019, Glossa: a journal of general linguistics.

[21]  Paul Friedrich,et al.  Tzeltal Numeral Classifiers: A Study in Ethnographic Semantics , 1972 .

[22]  F. Landman Indefinites and the type of sets , 2004 .

[23]  Jessica Coon,et al.  Interrogative Possessors and the Problem with Pied-Piping in Chol , 2009, Linguistic Inquiry.

[24]  Gunnar Björnsson,et al.  The Pragmatics of Insensitive Assessments: Understanding The Relativity of Assessments of Judgments of Personal Taste, Epistemic Modals, and More , 2010 .

[25]  J. Coon Little‐v0 Agreement and Templatic Morphology in Ch'ol , 2017 .

[26]  H. Wilbur Aulie,et al.  Diccionario ch'ol-español, español-ch'ol , 1978 .

[27]  Vázquez Alvarez,et al.  A grammar of Chol, a Mayan language , 2011 .

[28]  Peter Svenonius,et al.  The position of adjectives and other phrasal modifiers in the decomposition of DP , 2008, Adjectives and Adverbs.

[29]  Joseph Greenberg 10. Numeral Classifiers and Substantival Number: Problems in the Genesis of a Linguistic Type , 2013 .

[30]  L. Cheng,et al.  Bare and Not-So-Bare Nouns and the Structure of NP , 1999, Linguistic Inquiry.

[31]  Nora C. England,et al.  A Grammar Of Mam, A Mayan Language , 2011 .

[32]  Alan Bale,et al.  Classifiers Are for Numerals, Not for Nouns: Consequences for the Mass/Count Distinction , 2014, Linguistic Inquiry.

[33]  John J. McCarthy,et al.  A prosodic theory of nonconcatenative morphology , 1981 .

[34]  A. Romney Descriptive Semantics of Tzeltal Numeral Classifiers1 , 2009 .

[35]  Kathryn C. Keller The Chontal (Mayan) Numeral System , 1955, International Journal of American Linguistics.